Comentado por RiftWalker

Comentado por gahrek

Comentado por Stugs

A stack of bars will sell for about 160G on my server, a very good profit for very little effort.

Comentado por Dufferin

This is one of the best selling/ much needed bars for BS now in MOP. A lot of the contender gear required it, and the PVP gear sells well so it is well sought after by blacksmiths.

Comentado por Kharzack

If you are Quick-leveling Blacksmithing with this new bar method it requires a total of 4607 bars, and if you are to create them you need 9214 Ghost Iron Ores. If you aren't a miner you can get 20x Ghost Iron ore for 1 Spirit of Harmony. If you are to retrieve all of these Bars with Spirits, you will require 461 Spirit of Harmonies (460 Spririts, and 7 Motes but you would need to round up). Hope this was Helpful.

Comentado por Killyox

These babies sell better than Hot Dogs!

Should be renamed Hot Bar.

Useful for Alchemists, Blacksmiths, Engineers among others!

Comentado por Tengwar

I've tried to find a trainer who can teach me this, but none of the ones listed here can teach it to me. I'm maxed so I don't understand why.

Comentado por vikn

Drastic price surges

For future reference: As I'm writing this we're just over three months into Legion.

Some backgroundAs many already new expansions brings price changes to some older trade goods. Generally the goods of the previous expansion. Roughly speaking, either a previous useful trade goods becomes trash or a trade goods highly farmed becomes scarce and gains an increase in value.

The long term effect of inflation also brings price changes to trade goods.

Main pointInterestingly enough, as I looked over the prices of a number of useful MoP trade goods (two expansions back). I noticed a drastic surge in price coinciding with the Legion release date (September 1th 2016).

Similar price increases can be seen on some trade goods from other expansions. Though the pattern isn't as clear.

Three additional notes on the subject:

1. This can in no way be explained by inflation as it has not effected other types of items in any similar way.

2. With the release of Legion, wow saw a surge in returning players.

3. The time between the last patch of WoD (6.2) released 2015-06-23 and the launch of the next expansion Legion released 2016-09-01 was exceptionally long. This even caused some backlash due to players complained on the lack of new content.

Speculation

Why? My assumption would be that the drastic overnight changes was largely brought on due to the lack of content in WoD forcing people out into the older zones. Creating a strong supply of such materials. Thus keeping prices down for an extended period of time. And with the burst of content brought by Legion people quickly left the old zones causing supply to fall drastically.

Perhaps the large number of returning players and the implementation of the wardrobe function led to an increased demand for such trade gods. Which down the line often is crafted into transmog or mounts.

Future meaning If this becomes a reoccurring pattern it would be theoretically be possible to double or even triple your gold in just weeks or months by investing in the correct trade goods before the launch of a new expansion.

Your experiences Me personally haven't seen such a clear pattern between a release date and skyrocketing prices (on items unaffected by the release) before. Have you noticed similar occurrences during previous expansions? What do you think is the probable driving force behind it? Can it be mimicked for your gain during future expansions?